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Meet Actor Ken Davitian, The Real Azamat From Borat

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  • Meet Actor Ken Davitian, The Real Azamat From Borat

    MEET ACTOR KEN DAVITIAN, THE REAL AZAMAT FROM BORAT
    Written By: Adam Gonshor

    andPOP, Canada
    http://www.andpop.com/article/8351
    Feb 7 2007

    (andPOP) - Ken Davitian is an overnight success with 30 years of
    acting experience.

    Davitian did everything he had to do to remain and survive as an
    actor, from opening his own restaurants to working in the waste
    removal business.

    Then along came a fictitious Kazakhstani journalist.

    In Borat, Davitian played Azamat Bagatov, the Armenian-speaking
    producer. And now that the film has grossed over $125 million in the
    U.S., Davitian's life will never be the same.

    "Where I would have done the same one day's work on a movie set,
    they would have called it a day player. Not they call it a cameo,"
    he proudly tells andPOP.

    "This is what they call the stuff you dreamed about, the stuff you
    worked for. Now I'm inside the bubble instead of outside."

    Even the most hardcore Borat fans are surprised to learn Azamat was
    not who he appeared to be, but rather he was played by Davitian, an
    American actor. While promoting the film, he had to be in character
    for every interview and appearance. Now, Davitian is able draw back
    the curtain, essentially introducing himself to his new fans who know
    little about him.

    But Davitian was almost too good for the role of Azamat.

    When he auditioned in front of Sacha Baron Cohen (Borat) and director
    Larry Charles (Seinfeld, Curb Your Enthusiasm) for the role, Davitian
    never broke character.

    >>From the time he entered the room, Davitian was Azamat. He knew
    they were looking for someone to play a frumpy, fish-out-of-water,
    Eastern European, and they didn't realize he was acting. He handed
    them a wrinkled 8x10 photo of himself that he had folded in his pocket.

    Davitian realized that he had the room fooled and had to reveal his
    true identity.

    "They were concerned that, 'gee the guy is perfect but he's so green,
    he won't be able to last the 18 hours (of filming each day). He's
    just a nice old man and to drag him around for four months,' I think
    they thought it was a bit overwhelming for that person. I heard one
    of them say, 'he's still taking classes?' Because they had said,
    'can you do improvisation,' and I said (with the accent), 'oh yes,
    improvisation, I take it in classes,' and the reaction was, 'oh my
    god, what's he doing in an audition at this level and he's still
    taking classes?' So I knew I had to give it up at the end."

    Even once he won the role, Davitian was told that Azamat was going
    to have little-to-no face-time on camera. His voice was to be heard,
    but for the most part, he wouldn't actually be seen in the film. "It
    was out of (Cohen) being gracious to share the screen with me that
    I got that part in the movie."

    Want to know how Azamat really sounds? Listen to a clip of Ken Davitian
    discussing the Golden Globes and appearing in the movie. ( MP3 ) It
    would be shocking if Davitian were to get recognized for anything
    other than his role in "Borat," but playing Azamat was hardly his
    rookie experience.

    He's had small appearances in such television shows as Becker, E.R.,
    Arliss, Gilmore Girls and Boston Leagal, and in films like Holes
    and S.W.A.T.

    With a plethora of actors trying to secure one of the scarce roles
    that the Hollywood machine has to offer, Davitian was happy to accept
    whatever he was offered - until two weeks ago.

    "It's the first time in my life that I passed on something," he says.

    "My work ethic doesn't allow me to pass on things." But he has to
    now that he has a stack of scripts to choose from.

    He can decide his next role - and he hasn't decided yet - but Davitian
    hopes he can work with the Smashing Pumpkins again. Davitian had a
    creepy role, playing some sort of dominatrix-like character in the
    Pumpkins' 2000 music video, "Stand Inside Your Love."

    With the Pumpkins on the verge of getting back together, Davitian
    hopes frontman Billy Corgan is reading this article. "Tell them I
    want to do another video!"

    "Billy is a type of guy that he explained all of the emotions that
    were going through his head that he wanted to see in this character,"
    Davitian recalls.

    (Rumour has it, Sharon Osbourne hated that Pumpkins video so much that
    it was one of the reasons she quit as the band's manager. This is the
    first time Davitian has heard this. "Now when I meet Sharon Osbourne,
    she's not going to like me!")

    In the meantime, Davitian is spending some time at his restaurants,
    "The Dip," one located in Sherman Oaks and the other in Los Angeles.

    He suggests ordering the pot roast or pastrami. "All of the meat is
    cooked there, and it's all my recipes. A dip is a French role that's
    cut in half and it's either single dipped in the aju, double dipped
    which is the standard, and we also do submerged, where the sandwich
    is made and it's put into the aju and it's very wet, tastes great,
    and you get a bib."

    Davitian is also ready to focus on Borat for a little bit longer.

    He'll be doing the rounds again when the DVD is released in March. He
    was told that his original audition tape would be one of the extras,
    though that feature isn't listed in a recent Fox-distributed press
    release about the DVD.

    Last month, Davitian was the subject of Cohen's acceptance speech when
    he won the award for Best Actor in a Comedy or Musical at the Golden
    Globes. His completely nude and improvised wrestling scene with Cohen
    could be justifiably regarded as the funniest scene in the history
    of film, but Cohen reminded the star-packed audience that creating
    humour has its price.

    "I saw some amazing, beautiful, invigorating parts of America. But
    I saw some dark parts of America, an ugly side of America. A side of
    America that rarely sees the light of day," Cohen said in his speech.

    "I refer, of course, to the anus and testicles of my co-star, Ken
    Davitian. Ken, when I was in that scene and I stared down and saw
    your two wrinkled Golden Globes on my chin, I thought to myself,
    'I better win a bloody award for this.' And then when my 300-pound
    co-star decided to sit on my face and squeeze the oxygen from my lungs,
    I was faced with a choice: death or to breathe in the air that had
    been trapped in a small pocket between his buttocks for 30 years."

    A big deal is being made about Cohen having to endure Davitian's
    "Golden Globes" in his face, but remember, it was no picnic for
    Davitian either.

    However, Davitian reveals, that scene had one deception in the form
    of a strategically placed black bar.

    "I can tell you," he says, "that the black bar that you saw while he
    was running was an exaggeration and not necessary."

    Photo: http://www.andpop.com/article/8351
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